amarnath
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But look at ur govt shivering by just an Indian bark, comeon ur cartoonist are making fun of ur country...
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AMAN ki AASHA k liyay AMAN ki BHASHA bhi Zaroori hai!
You want this eternal threat to end? Liberate Indian Occupied Kashmir and prosecute the Samjhota Express criminal. Why does not India take the first step? After all, it projects to be more responsible and 'restrained' as you have very naively put!
Let us eliminate the 'main reason of content since 1947 ' behind this threat and progress! Hope this rationale is good for you?
Attack on Indian Parliament - INDIAN RESPONSE = 0
Attack on Mumbai - INDIAN RESPONSE = 0
The question here really is that is India stupid enough to impose a war on Pakistan or attack Pakistan based on whim and cooked up evidence of its own internal shortcomings or owing to some loonies gunning down a bunch of Indians, knowing full well that our response will be stone-for-brick laden with uranium based firecrackers?
India is seriously mistaken if it believes in any 'limited' engagement scenarios of any imposed conflict or initiation of war from across its borders. Trust me when I say this; our soldiers and nation will treat Indian Army worse than what it has done to TTP goons in Swat and SWA.
Any initiation of war between Pakistan and India will open a pandora's box of hurt on both sides of the border.
So either if its Chadambarum or Gen Kapoora or MMS; its best that India keep on pushing its usual anti-Pakistan rhetoric than think of throwing an actual bullet across our border in any shape, way of form.
Pakistan already is taking on the TTP in NWFP and FATA. Until and unless we want to open up a country wide front by taking on and arresting the leadership of groups such as JuD, this will have to wait.
The other issue is on what charges do we arrest these folks on? Indians have evidence but it implicates lower cadres. The senior leadership of such groups has not been linked by an concrete evidence so even if we detained these men, on what charges can the government hold them? Given the stand of the judiciary on holding people in jail without evidence, none of these leaders will stay in jail.
The Mumbai attacks have hurt Pakistan's image and cause more than anything. There is no state collusion in such actions and this should be well understood by the Indian side. Pakistani population will overwhelmingly support a very strong reaction to any unilateral strikes against Pakistan and this will result in further escalation.
The only option on the table is for Pakistan to move gradually against such groups so they cannot undermine the inter-state relations between Pakistan and India.
We waited for Taliban and they spread like the jungle fire. We wait for another terror group the same will happen. there was no LeT in Mardan before it was banned in 2002. but now they have taken over several villages by converting people to wahabi or salafi ideology. they have occupied or opened their own mosques. they spread jihadi literature, support Taliban, find them recruits, run illegal FM channels. The guys in Mardan work for both Afghan Taliban and TTP. They send militants to Afghanistan.
are these crimes not enough to implicate them. but no, nobody is doing anything about them. forget about india, they are threat to our society first.
so if we wait, insurgency will never be over in Pakistan.
What if Pakistanis land at our border?M J Akbar, 17 January 2010, 12:39 AM IST
A good friend from Lahore, an activist deeply committed to people's rights and the integrity of Pakistan's legal structures, asked me a question so startling that it took a while to sink in. What would India do if a million Pakistanis reached the Wagah border, demanding safety in India from the Taliban and its ancilliary ideological warriors?
The prospect is only as unthinkable as an analyst suggesting, over coffee on College Street in Calcutta in 1969, that three million refugees from East Pakistan would descend on the city's maidan within two years, forcing a war that would lead to an independent Bangladesh. Pakistan lost the trust of half its population within a quarter century of its birth. Within another four decades, half of what was left is in mortal fear of the other half.
Just as 1971 could not be contained within the geography of Pakistan, a second existential upheaval will also spill over into India. It cannot seep westwards into Afghanistan, because this is, in a sense, another east-west confrontation: the east is under siege from the frontier west, and the east can only move further east for asylum.
How would India, and, more important, Indians, react? In various ways, surely: shock, smugness, gloating, concern both for those trying to stream in and for the volatile consequences of their arrival. But at some point, sooner rather than later, this range would have to coalesce into one broad sentiment that could then be translated into official policy. Would that be sympathy or cynicism? Would the human heart prevail as children, women and the young sought the comfort of India, or would antipathy make us dismiss them with a sneer: "You made your bed in 1947, now sleep on its thorns."
Punjab would have the decisive voice. I believe that most of Punjab, though not all, would speak from its heart, perhaps with tears in its eyes, even if a colder Delhi thought it a good idea to consign the refugees to thorns. Is this being sentimental? Perhaps, but it would be a cold life without sentiment. In 1971, West Bengal did not check the religion of refugees. Most of them were Muslims, but that was less important than the fact they were three million frightened and hungry Bengalis.
But there are also significant differences, both in time and space. India had never felt threatened by East Pakistan. Bengali Muslims did not forsake their language or script although there was pressure from Karachi "nationalists", in the early years, to write Bengali in the Urdu alphabet (just as, for instance, Kemal Ataturk made Turks abandon the Arabic script and switch to Roman). The reaction was so severe that such ideas were quickly forgotten. There were riots in Bengal, as bitter if not as widespread as those in Punjab, but links were more firmly maintained. There were riots, and there was discrimination against Bengali Hindus; but East Pakistan was not emptied of Hindus, as happened to Hindus in Pakistani Punjab and Sind. Any anger against Indian "repression" was soon overtaken by the reality of West Pakistani oppression against Bengalis for reasons that can only be described as racist.
Time offers its own angularities. In 1971 Indians were angry at the aggression of 1965. War is a tragedy, but one which is acceptable as part of human experience; there is no lifetime in history that can claim it has not undergone the tension and cleavage of war. The dominant experience of the last four decades has been of terrorism. Terrorism is a sly, surreptitious, contemptible evil that makes no distinction between innocent and enemy. How much will the horror of remembered terrorism faze eyes and ice up veins if, God forbid, there is clamour at the gates of Wagah? War will inevitably follow refugees into India; it is possible that a fifth column might camouflage itself in the misery of a human exodus. When citizens have made borders irrelevant why should armies, state or non-state, uniformed or shadowy, respect lines drawn on water? Who will be where in that war? Will the Pakistani armed forces be as divided as the country, split by ideology? Will half the Pakistanis fight alongside Indian forces? The imponderables chase the unthinkable.
One of the defining images of Pakistan's sense of itself is etched on the walls of its side of Wagah: a depiction of wrecked refugees streaming into the new country after Partition. The calamity was not one-sided; there were traumatized millions entering India as well. But India has not frozen that moment in stone, to remind everyone that this was once the brutal battlefield of a civil war. Perhaps Lahoris will erase that image, wherever it is, before they reach the gates of Wagah.
Well you guys would be welcome if these non state actors push you out of your home
You want this eternal threat to end?
Liberate Indian Occupied Kashmir
and prosecute the Samjhota Express criminal.
Why does not India take the first step?
After all, it projects to be more responsible and 'restrained' as you have very naively put!
Let us eliminate the 'main reason of content since 1947 ' behind this threat and progress! Hope this rationale is good for you?
You pick your battles. You cannot wage wide-frontage fight against an extremist movement that has evolved over 30 years and has active and passive support amongst the population. The day Army goes in after these guys, you will see massive destabilization movement launched by the parties on the right.
Musharraf government was not able to justify a simple AT operation at Lal Masjid due to the frenzied media and public campaign supported by the right and here do we really believe that we can start police, army and civil action against the various groups in Pakistan all in one go?
If they try, they probably will fail because they will open too many fronts. Pakistan has to get at least a handle on the situation in FATA. Once the Army has that issue sorted out to a reasonable level, then you can start making inroads in the Punjab and down south. This is a 5-10 year strategy and it should be executed with care.
Attack on Indian Parliament - INDIAN RESPONSE = 0
Attack on Mumbai - INDIAN RESPONSE = 0
The question here really is that is India stupid enough to impose a war on Pakistan or attack Pakistan based on whim and cooked up evidence of its own internal shortcomings or owing to some loonies gunning down a bunch of Indians, knowing full well that our response will be stone-for-brick laden with uranium based firecrackers?
India is seriously mistaken if it believes in any 'limited' engagement scenarios of any imposed conflict or initiation of war from across its borders. Trust me when I say this; our soldiers and nation will treat Indian Army worse than what it has done to TTP goons in Swat and SWA.
Any initiation of war between Pakistan and India will open a pandora's box of hurt on both sides of the border.
So either if its Chadambarum or Gen Kapoora or MMS; its best that India keep on pushing its usual anti-Pakistan rhetoric than think of throwing an actual bullet across our border in any shape, way of form.
Why should India suffer? This is Pakistan's ideology, your generals spread throughout your country, your people allowed it to become a political force so shouldn't you have to deal with the consequences?
I sincerely hope the government hunts these terrorists down the next time the attack the country, even if that means chasing them across the border.
If Pakistan wants to shelter the terrorists and escalate the conflict then so be it. What choice do we have? We can't just sit back and watch innocents die for no reason. We can't wait for a decade so Pakistan can gets it's act together.